Revision of Play Videos Without Using Flash from Mon, 03/08/2010 - 05:17

The revisions let you track differences between multiple versions of a post.

The Trouble with Adobe Flash

There are two free software Flash players:

  • Swfdec, which has good compatibility but abruptly ceased to be developed sometime in early 2009.
  • Gnash, the GNU SWF player, which is being rapidly developed and relies on the gstreamer and ffmpeg backends to perform. It has good compatibility up to SWF 8 and 9.

YouTube

The low-fidelity video-sharing phenomenon that is YouTube started in 2005 and took the world wide web by storm almost overnight. To the dismay of Free Software users everywhere, SWF became a necessity. The following year, Google Inc. bought the service and has owned it ever since. In 2010, Google started an opt-in experiment to view videos with the new HTML5 specification as an alternative to Flash. Unfortunately, the format they have chosen is the closed, patent-encumbered H.264, not an open, royalty-free format like Theora. Contrary to Google's rhetoric, this decision has nothing to do with the technical capabilities of the Theora format, and everything to do with Google's promoting their own proprietary Chrome browser.

The latest versions of both Gnash and Swfdec should be able to play YouTube videos with good performance. However, users have reported that some YouTube videos refuse to play at all while others work just fine. There is a fallback solution available if you experience such an issue:

  1. Download the free software Greasemonkey add-on for the browser.
  2. Get the "YouTube Perfect" script for Greasemonkey, and also the embedded version.
  3. Now you can view any YouTube video as an MP4 video.

Watching a video without Flash using the YouTube Perfect script

Dailymotion

Dailymotion is another popular video sharing website. They launched around the same time as YouTube although never quite reached the same level of success.

In 2009 Dailymotion did something wonderful for Free Software by opening an alternative HTML5 portal to the website and converting many of their videos to Theora format.

Although Dailymotion is to be commended for this decision, there are still several problems that we should not turn a blind eye to:

  • Hundreds of thousands of videos are available in Theora format right now, especially the very popular ones, but many more videos have not been re-encoded and are Flash-only.
  • You have to be a MotionMaker (a certified uploader of original content) to even have the option of uploading videos as HTML5.
  • Dailymotion does not advertise this portal very well. Someone could potentially use Dailymotion for a long time and never know the Theora portal exists.

How You Can Help

Revisions

03/04/2010 - 04:27
AndrewT
09/02/2010 - 10:07
ivaylo
05/19/2011 - 11:27
SirGrant
10/31/2012 - 07:37
ahj
08/13/2013 - 18:19
lloydsmart
09/30/2013 - 23:36
ssdclickofdeath
12/05/2013 - 18:28
Dave_Hunt
12/06/2013 - 04:15
CentaurX
02/13/2014 - 02:13
GustavoCM
03/19/2014 - 20:06
lembas
07/01/2014 - 21:37
elodie
07/15/2014 - 02:05
Legimet
07/25/2014 - 15:51
aloniv
07/28/2014 - 02:32
arielenter
09/04/2014 - 02:53
muhammed
12/19/2014 - 18:49
Magic Banana
04/14/2015 - 04:41
danieru
07/17/2015 - 17:45
pizzaiolo
07/19/2015 - 13:08
tomlukeywood
09/21/2024 - 14:35
knife